Definition
TrueLayer is a British fintech founded in London in 2016 that has become the UK leader in Open Banking.
It offers a complete toolkit — aggregation (AIS), payment initiation (PIS), VRP (Variable Recurring Payments), KYC — and has made its name above all on PIS / Pay by Bank, having done more than anyone else to popularise account-based payment in e-commerce, in a market where UK OBIE regulation is more mature than in the EU.
History
- 2016 — founded by Francesco Simoneschi and Luca Martinetti.
- 2017 — OBIE registration and AISP/PISP authorisation.
- 2021 — $130m Series D (Tencent, Tiger Global).
- 2022 — broader EU coverage (FR, ES, DE, NL, BE).
- 2023-2025 — UK VRP leader; restructuring and a renewed focus on profitability.
Offering
- Pay by Bank (PIS): a checkout button, payment from the banking app, ~0.2 to 0.5% merchant fee (vs 1.5 to 2% for cards in the UK), mainly in crypto, neobanks and regulated gambling.
- VRP: recurring payments within a pre-authorised limit, with no new SCA — TrueLayer is the UK leader here.
- AIS: strong aggregation in the UK (all OBIE banks), decent in the EU.
- KYC / Verification and Signup: streamlined onboarding, useful for crypto.
UK specificity: VRP
VRP is an OBIE innovation: the customer gives an initial consent (with SCA) defining a cap, a frequency and a beneficiary; the TPP can then trigger payments within that limit with no new SCA. A direct competitor to Direct Debit and card subscriptions, it improves failure handling (no expired cards) and reconciliation. VRP is currently unique to the UK; the EU plans an equivalent in PSD3/PSR, not before 2027-2028.
Customers
Coinbase, Binance and eToro (crypto funding), Revolut, Monzo and Starling (Open Banking integrations), GoCardless (VRP partnership), regulated gambling players, and travel and automotive merchants in the UK.
TrueLayer vs competitors
| Player | Origin | Focus | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| TrueLayer (UK) | London | PIS + VRP | UK leader, decent EU |
| Tink (SE/Visa) | Stockholm | AIS + PIS | Broad EU |
| Yapily (UK) | London | Headless API | EU + UK |
| Bridge (FR) | Paris | AIS + PIS | FR + EU |
| GoCardless (UK) | London | Direct Debit + VRP | UK + EU |
The profitability challenge
Open Banking has not delivered on its initial commercial promises: Pay by Bank remains marginal compared with cards (5 to 10% in the UK, < 5% in the EU). TrueLayer has cut headcount (2023-2024), refocused on profitable segments (crypto, gambling, high baskets) and is betting on VRP — with strong upside if it takes off in the UK (2025+) and then the EU (2027+).
What TrueLayer is not
- Not a bank: it holds AISP + PISP status (FCA UK + ACPR EU).
- Not a card-acquiring PSP, nor a consumer wallet.
- Not an EU Plaid: Plaid is US, TrueLayer is UK + EU.
- Not technically unavoidable: a merchant can integrate OBIE directly, but almost all go through TrueLayer, Tink or Yapily.
Within the PSD2 / Open Finance ecosystem
TrueLayer is one of the three OBIE leaders (alongside Tink and Yapily), is gradually covering PSD2 in the EU, is preparing for the arrival of a European VRP equivalent (big upside), is extending into FIDA (savings, credit) and is integrating VoP (CoP in the UK, VoP in the EU).
Real-world examples
- Coinbase UK: 30 to 40% of deposits via TrueLayer Pay by Bank, with a sharp drop in chargebacks.
- VRP Sweep: TrueLayer and Monzo offer an automatic sweep to a savings account (more than 100k users).
- VRP for bills: work with UK energy companies to replace Direct Debit.
- eToro: Pay by Bank for funding trading accounts.
- Volume: more than $100bn in annualised TPV according to the company.
- Funding: more than $320m raised since inception.
- 2025+ strategy: VRP + crypto + premium B2B to reach profitability in 2026.